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OpenAI CEO's home struck by gunfire, days after Molotov cocktail attack: Police

Just two days after a man was arrested for allegedly throwing a Molotov cocktail at the San Francisco home of OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, his residence was struck by gunfire, police said.

ABC News

The San Francisco Police Department arrested two individuals who allegedly fired shots from a vehicle at Altman's home early Sunday morning.

Amanda Tom, 25, and Muhamad Tarik Hussein, 23, were arrested without incident at a separate residence in San Francisco, police said. A search warrant for the residence was conducted, with officers saying three firearms were seized.

It is unclear if the suspects deliberately targeted Altman's home.

The incident Sunday comes as Altman's home was the subject of a Molotov cocktail attack just two days ago, on Friday, according to the San Francisco Police Department and OpenAI.

The incident unfolded around 4 a.m. Friday when someone "threw an incendiary destructive device" at the house, which sparked a fire on an exterior gate, police said. No one was injured.

Kylie Cooper/Reuters - PHOTO: CEO of OpenAI Sam Altman attends the 2026 Infrastructure Summit of government officials, corporate executives, and labor leaders, in Washington, March 11, 2026.

The suspect fled on foot, but police said his description was dispatched to officers.

Around 5 a.m., officers responded to OpenAI's headquarters, where a man was allegedly threatening to burn down a building, and they "recognized the male to be the same suspect from the earlier incident," police said.

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The 20-year-old suspect was arrested and charges are pending, police said.

The San Francisco District Attorney's Office told ABC News that it could be next week until decisions are made on whether it's a local or federal case and charges are filed.

Sources briefed on the investigation told ABC News that investigators are trying to understand the incident and motive. It's not yet clear if it was a mental health incident, a disgruntled current or former employee or some form of domestic terrorism, the sources said.

Man facing federal charges for allegedly setting massive fire that destroyed warehouse: DOJ

The company said the situation is under control and there is no immediate threat to its offices.

"We deeply appreciate how quickly SFPD responded and the support from the city in helping keep our employees safe," OpenAI said in a statement. "We're assisting law enforcement with their investigation."

Altman responded to the incident in alengthy blog poston Friday, in which he shared a photo of his family "in the hopes that it might dissuade the next person from throwing a Molotov cocktail at our house, no matter what they think about me."

He said that amid debates on the Artificial General Intelligence industry, "we should de-escalate the rhetoric and tactics and try to have fewer explosions in fewer homes, figuratively and literally."

The SFPD's Special Investigations and Arson Units are leading the investigation, the company said. The FBI said it's aware of the incident and is working with San Francisco police.

OpenAI CEO's home struck by gunfire, days after Molotov cocktail attack: Police

Just two days after a man was arrested for allegedly throwing a Molotov cocktail at the San Francisco home of OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, hi...
U.K.'s Top Economic Official Berates Trump for Entering Iran War Without 'Clear Exit Plan'

Britain’s top economic official said she is “frustrated and angry” withPresident Donald Trumpfor entering the Iran war “without a clear exit plan,” referring to it as a “folly.”

Time Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves in Stevenage, England, on May 28, 2024. —Justin Tallis—Getty Images

"This is a war that we did not start. It was a war that we did not want,”saidChancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves. “I feel very frustrated and angry that the U.S. went into this war without a clear exit plan, without a clear idea of what they were trying to achieve.”

"As a result theStrait of Hormuz is now blocked," Reeves continued, emphasizing that the U.K. will not be getting involved in the U.S. blockade as they “don’t think it’s the right approach.”

“All the way through this conflict, we [the U.K.] have said ‘deescalate, deescalate,’” she added.

Reeves lamented the global economic impact of the Iran war and how it’s placing strain on U.K. families, while supporting British Prime Minister Keir Starmer for refusing to get actively involved in the conflict, despite Trump’s criticisms.

"It was absolutely the right decision for Keir Starmer to keep us out of this conflict,” she said.

Reeves made the remarks en route to Washington, D.C., where she is set to attend the International Monetary Fund (IMF)spring meetings.

The U.K. official is planning to use the meeting of global financial policymakers to “set out her plan to navigate the global crisis” and pitch Britain to high-earners in the Gulf as a “rare safe haven” for investors amid the instability of the Iran war.

“The Iran conflict must be a line in the sand on how we deal with global crisis and instability,” said Reeves in a statement shared with TIME.

Reeves' criticism of the handling of the Iran war is the latest indication that the“special relationship" between the U.K. and U.S.has become increasingly strained.

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Starmer last weeksaid he was “fed up”with people in Britain encountering economic instability due to the actions of Trump.

Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves attends a business reception at Lancaster House in London on Sept. 18, 2025. —Jordan Pettitt—Getty Images

Tensions between the two countries have been building since the start of the war on Feb. 28, after Starmerinitially declinedto allow U.S. forces access to British bases.

Since then, Trump has repeatedly criticized the U.K. and otherNATO alliesfor refusing to get actively involved in the conflict, eventhreatening to pull the U.S. outof NATO.

Upon announcing a U.S. naval blockade of Iran's ports in the Strait of Hormuz, Trump said he had invited other countries to lend their support.

But Starmer opted not to get involved, instead banding together with European allies to find a solution toreopen the Strait.

The U.K. leader will join French President Emmanuel Macron inhostinga transit summit in Paris on Friday to develop a multilateral approach to restoring the freedom of navigation.

Macronsaidhe had spoken Monday with both Trump and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian, encouraging areturn to U.S.-Iran negotiationsand pushing for theinclusion of Lebanon in the cease-fire.

He also emphasized the need for the Strait of Hormuz to be “reopened unconditionally without restrictions or tolls.”

Meanwhile, the U.K. and the U.S. relationship will come under the spotlight once more later this month whenKing Charles IIIand Queen Camilla pay astate visitto the White House.

Starmer on Monday, whenaskedby an opposition party to recall the King’s trip—which comes against the backdrop of the Iran war—said that the relationship remains “very important on a number of levels” and reaffirmed that the visit will go ahead to mark the 250th anniversary of American independence.

U.K.'s Top Economic Official Berates Trump for Entering Iran War Without 'Clear Exit Plan'

Britain’s top economic official said she is “frustrated and angry” withPresident Donald Trumpfor entering the Iran war “without a clear...
At least 25 killed in stampede at popular historic fortress in Haiti

A stampede at a popular historical fortress in Haiti killed at least 25 people and injured dozens of others, officials said, revising an earlier, higher number of fatalities.

CBS News

The incident took place Saturday during an annual Easter gathering at the Citadelle Henri, also known as Citadelle Laferriere, a 19th-century fortress and tourist spot in the northern town of Milot.

"The injured are currently receiving the necessary medical care, and a rescue team is searching for any missing persons," Culture Minister Emmanuel Menard told AFP on Sunday.

Jean Henri Petit, the head of civil protection for Haiti's Nord department, warned the death toll could yet rise, CBS News partnerBBC Newsreported.

The Citadelle Laferriere is a large mountaintop fortress in northern Haiti. / Credit: John Seaton Callahan / Getty Images

Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aime said the incident happened during a "tourist activity bringing together many young people." He said an investigation has been launched and "all relevant authorities" were mobilized to support those affected.

"The government sends its sincere condolences to the affected families," Fils-Aimé said in a statement onFacebook.

"The Government is monitoring the situation with utmost attention and urges the population to be calm and cautious, awaiting the results of ongoing investigations to determine the exact circumstances of this tragedy," the statement continued. "In this particularly troubling circumstance, the Prime Minister and the Government of the Republic reaffirm their solidarity with the victims and the entire affected community."

The Haitian National Police, in a separate statement, said it had opened an investigation to determine the exact cause of the incident. The investigation led authorities to update the death toll to 25 fatalities. Autopsies were underway on Sunday.

The UNESCO World Heritage Site is closed to visitors "until further notice," Menard said.

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Several dozen people were also injured and taken to the hospital, local newspaper Le Nouvelliste reported.

Initial reports said visitors, mostly young people, were crammed against a single entrance and a scuffle broke out between those trying to leave and enter the site. Other local media reports said the gathering took place after being advertised on TikTok.

The government urged citizens to "be calm and cautious" while it investigates.

"All competent authorities are fully mobilized and placed on maximum alert to provide, without delay, the necessary assistance, care and support," it added in its statement.

Some of the victims' bodies remained at the site on Sunday, the Associated Press reported.

A young man told the AP his sister had traveled there after studying diligently to get the grades necessary to be part of a school field trip for the best students. He sobbed after carrying her body, which had been covered with a white tarp.

The fortress was built by revolutionary Henri Christophe shortly after Haiti gained independence from France. The site has become a symbol of Haitian independence.

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Inflation skyrockets as Iran war impacts U.S. economy

At least 25 killed in stampede at popular historic fortress in Haiti

A stampede at a popular historical fortress in Haiti killed at least 25 people and injured dozens of others, officials said, revising a...
Officials Reportedly Considering Second Round of U.S.-Iran Talks As Sticking Points Remain

After marathon talks over the weekend failed to secure an agreement, officials are reportedly looking at a second round of negotiations to end theU.S. and Israeli war against Iran.

Time Vice President J.D. Vance arrives for a news conference after a meeting with representatives from Pakistan and Iran in Islamabad, Pakistan, on April 12, 2026. —Jacquelyn Martin—Pool/Getty Images

President Donald Trump and his Administration are open to resuming in-person talks as soon as he believes Iran is prepared to meet his demands, sources toldCNN. That could mean a second meeting with Iranian officials before the two-week cease-fire expires on April 21 or potentially extending the cease-fire, officials said.

Read More:Why the Iran-U.S. Peace Talks Failed

Pakistan has proposed hosting a second in-person meeting in Islamabad, Pakistani officials told theAssociated Press. Turkey, which was among several intermediaries involved in weeks of negotiations, is also stepping in to try and resolve the differences between the U.S. and Iran, a regional source told CNN.

The Trump Administration has also ramped up pressure on Tehran to accept their demands byimposing a naval blockadeon vessels going to or from Iranian ports through theStrait of Hormuz. The narrow waterway through which a fifth of the world’s oil trade passes has been a key point of leverage for Iran, which militarized the Strait at the start of the war and hasallowed only a small number of vessels to transit through.

Read More:Why Iran Thinks It’s Winning

“They’d like to make a deal very badly,” Trumptoldreporters at the White House on Monday afternoon. The President said Iran had called the U.S. that morning.

“After 21 hours of negotiations, the Iranians chose the pursuit of a nuclear weapon over peace. The President has already ordered a naval blockade on the Strait of Hormuz, ending the Iranian extortion, and wisely keeps all additional options on the table,” White House spokesperson Olivia Wales told TIME on Monday in response toreportsthat Trump is considering limited military strikes on Iran in addition to the blockade.

“Anyone who thinks that they know what President Trump will do next is purely speculating,” Wales added.

TIME has reached out to the White House for further comment.

But the naval blockade has also raised tensions around possible renewed fighting between the U.S. and Iran. Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)saidthat it would consider the encroachment of U.S. military vessels upon the Strait of Hormuz to be a cease-fire violation. In a Mondayposton Truth Social, Trump warned that if any Iranian ships “come anywhere close to our BLOCKADE, they will be immediately ELIMINATED, using the same system of kill that we use against the drug dealers on boats at Sea”—an apparent reference to the Administration’sdeadly strikes on alleged drug boatsin the eastern Pacific Ocean.

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Iran also previously said it wants to maintain control of the Strait even after the end of the war, potentially collecting toll fees that would serve as war reparations. Reutersreportedearly Tuesday, citing data from LSEG, MarineTraffic and Kpler, that a U.S.-sanctioned Chinese tanker passed through the Strait in spite of the naval blockade.

The continued disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz have led tosurgingoil and gas pricesaround the world, as well assupply bottlenecksaffecting fertilizer and other goods, which the U.N.’s food and agriculture agencywarnedon Monday could lead to global food catastrophe.

Meanwhile, the U.K. has said it will not join Trump’s naval blockade. Earlier in the war, to Trump’s chagrin, NATO alliesrebuffed the U.S. President’s callfor them to provide military support to secure the Strait.

A fully reopened Strait of Hormuz is a red line for the U.S., Vice President J.D. Vance, who led negotiations in Islamabad over the weekend, toldFox Newson Monday.

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said in aposton X that the two sides were “inches away” from an agreement when Iran “encountered maximalism, shifting goalposts, and blockade” from the U.S.

Israel’sescalating attacks on Lebanon, which have killed more than 2,000 people since March 2, have also threatened the possibility of a more lasting truce between the U.S. and Iran. Iran hadearlier saidthat any cease-fire must extend to Lebanon and beyond, but Israel and the U.S. disagreed. Lebanese and Israeli ambassadors are set to meet in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday to discuss “a pause in military activity if not a cease-fire,” Lebanon’s Culture Minister Ghassan Salame toldAl Jazeera, although Hezbollah Chief Naim Qassemreportedlyurged Lebanon to cancel the meeting, calling the talks pointless.

Nuclear disagreement remains an obstacle

Among U.S. demands is that Iran abandon its nuclear program, which had been a sticking point in past talks towards anuclear agreement, including negotiations that wereinterrupted by Israeli strikes on Iranlast June and renewed talks in thedays immediately beforethe U.S. and Israel attacked Iran on Feb. 28. Iranian officials previously said mistrust in the U.S. has been high ever since Trump withdrew the U.S. from the Barack Obama-negotiated Iran nuclear deal in 2018.

Trump officials proposed a 20-year suspension in Iranian uranium enrichment on Saturday, which Iranian negotiators countered with a proposal for a five-year suspension that the U.S. rejected, according to theNew York Times. American negotiators also reportedly want Iran to dismantle its major nuclear enrichment facilities and hand over more than 400 kilograms of highly enriched uranium that U.S. officials have said was buried underground by theU.S. bombing campaignlast year. The U.S. previously proposed that Iran stop enriching any uranium for 10 years in exchange for the U.S. paying for its nuclear fuel, which Iran rejected, U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff toldFox Newsin early March.

Russia has also renewed its offer to take Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile as part of a potential agreement, according to Russian state-owned RIA Novosti news agency.

Trump officials are not keen to resume the war, sources told CNN, especially as it has led torising prices for Americansand isbroadly unpopular with the public.

Vance told Fox News that Iranian negotiators “moved in our direction, … but they didn’t move far enough.” He said the Iranian negotiators had to return to Tehran from Islamabad to get approval for any deal with the U.S.

“There really is, I think, a grand deal to be had here, but it’s up to the Iranians, I think, to take the next step,” Vance said.

Officials Reportedly Considering Second Round of U.S.-Iran Talks As Sticking Points Remain

After marathon talks over the weekend failed to secure an agreement, officials are reportedly looking at a second round of negotiations...
How the US Navy could blockade Iran’s ports and sweep mines from the Strait of Hormuz

Six weeks after the beginning of the war with Iran, President Donald Trump is giving the United States Navy its most difficult jobs of the conflict:blockading Iran’s portsand clearing the strategic Strait of Hormuz of any Iranian mines.

CNN The USS Abraham Lincoln, USS Michael Murphy, USS Frank E. Petersen Jr., USNS Henry J. Kaiser, USNS Carl Brashear, USCG Robert Goldman and USCGC Clarence Sutphin. Jr. sail in formation in the Arabian Sea, on February 6, 2026. - Petty Officer 1st Class Jesse Mo/US Navy

The blockade order would apply to all Iranian ports, both inside and outside of the strait –– a critical passage for the global energy trade on which Iran has had a chokehold since the war broke out – from 10 a.m. ET Monday, USCentral Command (CENTCOM) said.

Trump indicated that mission would have an even wider scope too, possibly well outside the Persian Gulf.

“I have also instructed our Navy to seek and interdict every vessel in International Waters that has paid a toll to Iran. No one who pays an illegal toll will have safe passage on the high seas,” he said Sunday, referring to Tehran’s move to charge ships for safe passage.

The point of the mission is to maximize pressure on Iran by strangling its cashflow from the energy trade. But solving the global energy crisis this war will take another tough job: clearing any sea mines Iran has laid.

On Saturday, Trump said the Navy had begun minesweeping operations in the strait. CENTCOM affirmed that, saying two US guided-missile destroyers had entered the strait to begin “setting conditions for clearing mines.”

The missions mark a shift in this conflict, from the skies to the sea. To date, the conflict has been mostly conducted by air, although a US submarine didsink an Iranian navy frigateoff Sri Lanka in the early days of the war.

Navy aircraft flying off aircraft carriers have also been involved.

But those missions aren’t as complex, or as risky, as what Trump is asking of the Navy now.

Here’s a look at what’s involved.

What is a blockade?

A blockade is a tool of economic warfare as much as it is kinetic warfare.

The Newport Manual on the Law of Naval defines a blockade as “the capture of contraband, and the capture or destruction of enemy property found at sea.”

“These methods deny an enemy the chance of economic revenue from its exports and the benefits of imports that support its war effort,” the manual says.

To be legal, the imposition of a blockade must follow certain rules, including:

  • It must be declared and notified, meaning warnings must go out to ships that it might affect.

  • It must be effective, meaning the US must have the ships and aircraft to enforce it.

  • It must be impartial, affecting the vessels of any nation.

  • It cannot be targeted solely at civilian populations, but harm to civilians is acceptable.

  • It must not block access to neutral ports and may not block a strait, like Hormuz, which Trump has said is open to non-Iran- related international shipping.

Can the US effectively pull it off

A boat is seen off the coast of Musandam governorate in Oman, overlooking the strait of Hormuz on April 8, 2026. - Reuters

Closing off Iran’s ports, almost all of which are inside the Strait of Hormuz, to oil tankers and other merchant vessels would be “procedurally difficult, but practical if the US has maritime superiority,” said analyst Carl Schuster, a former US Navy captain.

And that may not be the case.

Iran still has the ability to fight back with mines, an unknown number of small boats that can carry missiles, surface drones, aerial drones and land-based cruise missiles as well as shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles that could target helicopters and fighter jets protecting the ships in the water, analysts say.

Yu Jihoon, a research fellow at the Korea Institute for Defense Analyses and a former South Korean submarine officer, called the blockade “high risk” because of those Iranian options to strike back.

“If Iran accepts it as a violation of its sovereignty or a de facto expansion of maritime warfare, the possibility of a local military conflict could increase,” Yu said.

James Stavridis, a retired US Navy admiral, told CNN’s Fareed Zakaria, that he thinks the Pentagon would need two aircraft carrier strike groups and about a dozen surface ships outside the Gulf to patrol the Strait of Hormuz at its entrance.

Inside the Gulf, Stavridis said at least six US destroyers would be needed, along with help from the navies of American partners like the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia.

“You want to try to bottle it up on both sides,” he said of the strait.

Schuster said the US Navy trains boarding teams of about 10 to 14 people to take control of merchant ships. Each team includes an “officer of the deck” who essentially acts as the merchant ship’s captain after a takeover and “guides it to an anchorage or port for detainment.”

But all that takes time.

Schuster says of six US destroyers inside the strait, two will be used to do boardings, with the other four nearby to deal with any Iranian attempts to stop those actions.

The two destroyers could possibly seize six ships a day between them, Schuster said.

Prior to US and Israel’s war on Iran, some 130 ships a day were passing through the strait, through which roughly a fifth of the world’s oil and gas flowed.

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What is ‘prize law?’

Jennifer Parker, a non-resident fellow at the Lowy Institute and former Royal Australian Navy officer, said the seizure approach is the more likely option for the US to use in trying to block Iranian shipping.

Parker said it falls under international “prize law.”

According to the Newport manual, “belligerents at sea” can capture enemy merchant vessels and goods outside neutral waters. They can also subject “neutral” merchant vessels to visit, search, diversion, and apply capture “if they carry contraband.”

Prize law also states that neutral merchant shipping anywhere can be attacked as military objectives if they “make an effective contribution to the enemy’s military action or war-fighting.”

So rather than a blockade (as stated), what we are more likely to see is selective interference with shipping under prize law to influence shipping routes, reduce Iranian control & generate economic leverage,” Parker wrote on X.

Historically blockades were implemented close to a nation’s shores, but modern intelligence, search and reconnaissance makes longer-range operations feasible, said Alessio Patalano, professor of war and strategy at King’s College London.

It’s also possible to begin the operations farther from Iran, then move closer as conditions warrant, he said.

This would prevent Iran from immediately bringing its advantages of small craft and short-range weaponry into play, he added.

Mines and minesweeping

Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Frank E. Petersen Jr. sails in the Arabian Sea during Operation Epic Fury, on March 18, 2026. - US Navy

Shortly after the war began, two people familiar with US intelligence told CNN that Iran had begun laying a small number of mines in the Hormuz strait.

Two US destroyers – the USS Michael Murphy and USS Frank E. Peterson – went through the strait over the weekend, but Schuster said they were unlikely to be doing any actual mine clearance, and they are not the prime platforms for that work.

More likely, he said, is that the destroyers went through the strait to demonstrate that such navigation was possible and that there were no mines there.

The actual minesweeping work is more likely to be done by underwater drones, littoral combat ships equipped with a mine-countermeasures package and helicopters, Schuster said.

Mines come in many different forms, he said, and some may not have been detected by or set off by the US warships.

Among those Iran could deploy in the strait are:

  • Spiked contact mines like those seen in World War II movies.

  • Influence mines that are set off by the static electricity ships generate when moving through salt water.

  • Magnetic mines that react to changes in the “magnetic signature” of the water when ships pass through it.

  • Acoustic mines that react to noises the ships make as they pass over.

  • Pressure mines that detonate when water pressure changes to an amount the mines measures as from a type of ship it is designed to destroy.

Some complex mines contain combinations of the types above, making them particularly hard to counter, Schuster said.

And some advanced mines have counters that will let a certain number of ships pass before detonating.

“These mines make it very difficult to determine if all the mines in a minefield have been detonated or otherwise neutralized,” he said.

Mines are countered in two key ways, sweeping and hunting, Schuster said.

For moored mines, sweeping uses mechanisms that cut cables that attach the mines to the sea floor. The mines will then float to the surface where they can be destroyed.

For bottom mines, minesweeping ships tow gear that can mimic the acoustic, electrical or magnetic signatures of ships and detonate them safely.

But sweeping techniques don’t work against complex and pressure mines, according to Schuster.

They can be detected by sonar on underwater drones or lasers mounted on the drones or even on helicopters and then destroyed safely.

Analysts also note that US minesweeping capacity alone is limited.

The US Navy decommissioned its four specialized minesweepers that had been based in Bahrain, in the Persian Gulf, last year.

Minesweeping duties were turned over to three littoral combat ships equipped with the Mine Countermeasures package, but the location of those ships has not been disclosed. Two of them were seen in Singapore last month.

Analysts said Washington may have to look outside its own ranks to get a thorough sweeping of mines in the Strait of Hormuz.

“This is an area in which the US Navy would probably rely on allies and partners more than one would assume,” Patalano said.

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How the US Navy could blockade Iran’s ports and sweep mines from the Strait of Hormuz

Six weeks after the beginning of the war with Iran, President Donald Trump is giving the United States Navy its most difficult jobs of ...

 

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